F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway

F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway

ISSN 2039-2117 (online) Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Vol 6 No 6 S2 ISSN 2039-9340 (print) MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy November 2015 The Reflection of Women in Two Great American Writer’s Creative Works: F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway Shahla Sorkhabi Darzikola Department of English, Payame Noor University, Iran; E-mail: [email protected] Fahimeh Keshmiri Farhangian University, Fatemeh Zahra Pardis, Isfahan, Iran Doi:10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n6s2p179 Abstract The literary of heritages of two great writers in 20th century, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, include several topics that are derived from experiences that they had with women in their life .The first major women who influenced Fitzgerald and Hemingway’s lives and works were their mother. About Fitzgerald, besides his mother, his wife Zelda and two other women, Ginevra King and Sheilah Graham, played a major role in his life and deeply influenced his fiction as sources of inspiration. Agnes Von Kurowsky as Hemingway’s nurse, his four wives, Jane Mason, and Adriana Ivancich were the women who really had affected his life and creative works besides his mother as sources of inspiration. The other women who seriously influenced both of them, was Gertrude Stein. Keywords: Hemingway- Fitzgerald- women- wives- sources of inspiration- American writer 1. Introduction The role of women in society is continually questioned and for centuries women have struggled to find their place in a world that is mostly male oriented. Literature provides the reader a window into the lives, actions, and thoughts of women. In the 19th century, women in literature were frequently portrayed as obedient to men. Literature of this time often characterized women as subjugated by society, as well as by the male influences in their lives. This era is particularly captivating because it is a time in modern society when women were still treated as second-class populace. F.Scott Fitzgerald portrayed women in his several stories like The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night, Winter Dreams and Babes in the Woods. Ernest Hemingway depicted women in his some works such as The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber, The Old Man and The Sea, Farewell to Arms and The Snows of Kilimanjaro. 2. Literature Review One of the literary sources related to the topic of this paper is The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald; the editor is Ruth Prigozy, Cambridge university press, 2002. “This particular volume has a great amount of information both in terms of analysis of Fitzgerald’s works, and the ramifications their receptions had on Fitzgerald himself and on his careered. It takes note of Fitzgerald's career in terms of both his writing and his life, and presents the reader with a full and accessible picture of each, against the background of American social and cultural change in the early decades of the twentieth century” (Prigozy Ruth. 2002 ). The next related book is the The Far Side of Paradise, a biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald by Arthur Mizener and a new introduction by Mathew J. Bruccoli, 2006. In the book Mizener mentioned that “there are three concentric areas of interest in a study of Scott Fitzgerald. At the heart of it is his work, for he was a natural writer if only in the sense that from his grade-school days until the end of his life nothing was ever quite real to him until he had written about it. Zelda is the second area of interest for a study of him, only less absorbing than the first, and, because his imagination worked so immediately from his experience, very related to it. The third area of interest is the time and place in which he lived” (Mizener Arthur. 1965). Another related book written by Linda Wagner Martin is Ernest Hemingway: A Literary Life. New York. 2007. “In this book there is a wealth of information of Hemingway’s life and works especially about his love of animals, natural 179 ISSN 2039-2117 (online) Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Vol 6 No 6 S2 ISSN 2039-9340 (print) MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy November 2015 world and his character. She explores Hemingway’s friendship with women, several marriages, wars and his entertainment” (Martin Linda, W. 2007). Another source that includes scientific information is Ernest Hemingway, University of Minnesota Press, by Young Philip, 1973. Philip Young in the book referred to: “…a brief description of biography of the Hemingway, his style, his hero, that is to say the protagonists of many of his works, who so resemble each other that we have come to speak of them in the singular, his manner and attitudes have been very widely recognized not just in the English-speaking world but wherever books are widely read” (Young Philip, 1973). 3. Research Methodology As a first step, the researcher read books and papers that present the major issues and concerned of in theme of women. In the second step, the researcher read biographical work on Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s life to get a clear picture of their background, their development as writers and their response to the age that they lived in. The researcher, in the third step, did an exhaustive reading of Hemingway and Fitzgerald’s major short stories and novels. As the last step the researcher studied critical works that analyses and reflect the thematic, philosophical, social, cultural and intellectual preoccupations that were revealed in Hemingway and Fitzgerald’s life and works. In accomplishing this study, intrinsic approach and also apply descriptive analytical methods are used which combine with interpretation. 4. Results and Discussion 4.1 Influential Women in Fitzgerald's Creative Works Mary (Mollie) McQuillan , F.Scott Fitzgerald’s mother, was the first major woman who influenced his life. Fitzgerald's mother was a rich woman and while the Fitzgeralds fell into financial difficulty, they had to count on her. When they had this kind of problems “Mollie abandoned the attempt to keep up her personal appearance (neglecting both grooming and fashion), which embarrassed her fastidious son. Scott later recorded a dream in which he admitted being ashamed of her” (Essay on The Women Who Influenced Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald’s life, 1969). In Fitzgerald’s childhood his mother was outstandingly unconventional in dress and manner that causing him some suffering. Mollie's family provided hold for the family during the author's childhood and they could live close to all of the affluent St. Paul families, and could not help but notice the manor belonging to railroad tycoon, James J. Hill, in walking distance from his own modest home. He wrote that “he felt like an outsider throughout his childhood, for although he lived among them and socialized with them; the rich inhabited a different world” (Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald, 1981). That idea would find its way into his fiction – notably The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night. Fitzgerald's feelings to his mother influenced him as an individual. Since before Scott's birth his two siblings had died, his mother was anxious about his physical condition. Fitzgerald reminded his mother's nervousness regarding his health all through his babyhood. But her efforts to ruin him strengthened his aversion for her. Mary desired her son to have social ambition. This aspiration to have a high social status and be a manager influenced Scott's personality and reflected in the most heroes of his fiction. The second woman who influenced Fitzgerald was Ginevra King .Fitzgerald attended in prestigious Princeton University, but could not quite fit in because nearly all of the students were more affluent and came from more prosperous families than his own. In 1914, through a trip home to St. Paul, he met Ginevra King, at a dance. She was the core of whole thing Scott wanted and could not have. He pursued the relationship for over a year, but gave it up in 1916 after her father supposedly told Fitzgerald that "poor boys shouldn’t think of marrying rich girls” (Bryant Mangum, 1981). In 1918, Ginevra King married a man of her own social class and sent Fitzgerald a wedding announcement, which he saved. This first romance is reflected in most of his stories such as his first novel, The Romantic Egoist, which was named This Side of Paradise afterward. Ginevra King served as inspiration for the characters Isabelle, Rosalind, and Eleanor, the three very fashionable girls in the novel. Fitzgerald stated that “King dumped me with the most supreme boredom and indifference” (Noden Merrell, 2003). His failure to win Ginevra cut deep. The femme fatale, the wealthy and attractive woman always just idealistic, became a frequent theme in his works as well as his life. About the role of Zelda Sayre, Fitzgerald’s wife, as a source of inspiration it can be said when Fitzgerald was 23 years old and the First Lieutenant 67th Infantry and aspiring writer he met the beautiful young Zelda Sayre at a Country Club dance in her hometown, Montgomery in July 1918. Several weeks later Scott seemed to have decided to marry Zelda, who in the end became, in effect, Scott's material. Almost all his books depicted variations on their life together, now and then incorporating bits of her diaries and letters as well. 180 ISSN 2039-2117 (online) Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Vol 6 No 6 S2 ISSN 2039-9340 (print) MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy November 2015 Zelda’s family was Southern aristocracy. Undeniably, a Fitzgerald profile gets a combined profile of Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. “She had the strongest influence on him after 1919, and the circumstances of their marriage formed his career.

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